Browsing by Subject "Republican China"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item For China, and for science: the Institute of Agriculture at Tsinghua University and scientists in Republican China, 1930s-1940s(2013-08) Geng, XuanIn 1934, the National Tsinghua University established an institute of agriculture. It was expanded and strengthened during the Second Sino-Japanese War. Although it only existed for twelve years, this institute played a significant role in the history of science in modern China. Fifty-nine agricultural scientists worked at this institute. Four of them were selected as academicians of the Academia Sinica in 1948, and fourteen became academicians of the China's Academy of Sciences after 1949. This essay will examine the history of the Institute of Agriculture in Tsinghua University and explore the reason for its success. I argue that the Tsinghua researchers' dual-identity of being both Chinese people and scientists enabled this institute to survive and thrive in an extremely turbulent era. Motivated by the Chinese-scientist dual-identity, these scientists at Tsinghua IOA were able to be flexible and to relieve tensions between the Chinese and the foreign, between the central and local political forces, and between different local environments, and therefore contributed to the development of both their country and the scientific knowledge they worked on.Item Serving China through Agricultural Science: American-Trained Chinese Scholars and “Scientific Nationalism” in Decentralized China (1911-1945)(2015-08) Geng, XuanThroughout the Republican era in China (1911-1949), American-trained Chinese scholars played critical roles in establishing Chinese institutions for agricultural education, research, and extension. This dissertation argues that it was the sense of "belonging to China"� as a cultural and social entity-not a political one-that motivated Chinese scientists to study in the U.S. and to return to China, to apply their knowledge to the social problems of their homeland. Based on the American model, the scientific institutions established by these scholars nonetheless developed into a pattern uniquely adapted to the Chinese situation. This dissertation also explores the motivations and strategies used by these American-trained Chinese scholars to fulfil their desire of serving China by developing hybrid agricultural ideas, practices, and institutions. Due to political decentralization in Republican China, scholars with similar motivations and goals adopted diverse strategies, which was unusual for nationalistic scholars in other historical contexts. I demonstrate the flexibility of their ideas and practices, which proved adaptive to the dynamic social and natural environments in which they worked (from the Northeast to the Southwest, and from the early "warlord period"� through the turmoil of war in the 1940s). Hoping to improve the lives of Chinese people and to strengthen China's international status, these scientists not only survived during this turbulent era and established a new model for agricultural research and education, but also succeeded in creating and circulating agricultural knowledge for global scientific communities.